DWQA Questions › Tag: powerFilter:AllOpenResolvedClosedUnansweredSort byViewsAnswersVotesHoffer wrote: “Patience is a by-product of growth – we can bide our time when it is time for our growth. There is no patience in acquisition or in the pursuit of power and fame. Nothing is so impatient as the pursuit of a substitute for growth.” What is Creator’s perspective?ClosedNicola asked 3 years ago • Limiting Beliefs244 views0 answers0 votesHoffer wrote: “There are many who find a good alibi far more attractive than an achievement. For an achievement does not settle anything permanently. We still have to prove our worth anew each day: we have to prove we are as good today as we were yesterday. But when we have a valid alibi for not achieving anything we are fixed, so to speak, for life. Moreover, when we have an alibi for not writing a book, painting a picture, and so on, we have an alibi for not writing the greatest book and not painting the greatest picture. Small wonder that the effort expended and the punishment endured in obtaining a good alibi often exceed the effort and grief requisite for the attainment of a most marked achievement.” What is Creator’s perspective?ClosedNicola asked 3 years ago • Limiting Beliefs234 views0 answers0 votesHoffer wrote: “The impulse of power is to turn every variable into a constant.” What is Creator’s perspective?ClosedNicola asked 3 years ago • Limiting Beliefs299 views0 answers0 votesHoffer wrote: “It is clear that a society in the grip of fear, is not free no matter how numerous the freedoms its constitution guarantees. There are already many people in this country (America) who would surrender certain of their civil rights for a feeling of personal security.” What is Creator’s perspective?ClosedNicola asked 3 years ago • Limiting Beliefs247 views0 answers0 votesHoffer wrote: “There is perhaps no better way of measuring the natural endowment of a soul, than by its ability to transmute dissatisfaction into a creative impulse. The genuine artist is as much dissatisfied as the revolutionary. Yet how diametrically opposed are the products each distills from his dissatisfaction.” What is Creator’s perspective?ClosedNicola asked 3 years ago • Limiting Beliefs238 views0 answers0 votesHoffer wrote: “The genuine creator creates something that has a life of its own, something that can exist and function without him … With the noncreative it is the other way around: in whatever they do, they arrange things so that they themselves become indispensable.” How can Empowered Prayer and the Lightworker Healing Protocol help to transform us into “genuine creators” rather than fearful controllers?ClosedNicola asked 3 years ago • Limiting Beliefs252 views0 answers0 votesWe understand that disconnection from the higher self within the divine realm is what allows people to stray from the divine path and, at an extreme, become a psychopath. This seems to start with the development of narcissism, which is extreme selfishness, and on to the so-called sociopath who may only have a weak conscience remaining, but a less severe state of corruption than the psychopath. Are these all sharing a common dilemma, but just on a spectrum of relative severity in consequences?ClosedNicola asked 3 years ago • Limiting Beliefs282 views0 answers0 votesWhat percent of human beings fall within the categories of narcissist, sociopath, and psychopath according to those rough descriptions?ClosedNicola asked 3 years ago • Limiting Beliefs288 views0 answers0 votesIn addition to prayer work and the Lightworker Healing Protocol, what other practical advice can Creator share for people who find themselves entangled with a psychopath? What if the psychopath is a parent, or a sibling, or even a child?ClosedNicola asked 3 years ago • Limiting Beliefs240 views0 answers0 votesCreator has shared that the journey back to divine alignment for a psychopath, is the most difficult undertaking imaginable. Yet, some have managed to do this. Can Creator share a brief synopsis of a success story? And what in particular constituted the true turning point moment? Did that being reach rock bottom in some way? Was a divine outreach of some kind required? And if this being had rejected earlier outreaches, what made the successful outreach possible where the others failed?ClosedNicola asked 3 years ago • Limiting Beliefs256 views0 answers0 votesComparing the fallen angelics to humans, which group of psychopaths is the most difficult to rescue and turn back to divine alignment, and why?ClosedNicola asked 3 years ago • Limiting Beliefs259 views0 answers0 votesMost of the questions for today’s show are derived from the book, The Psychopath Code: Cracking the Predators that Stalk Us, by a late open-source software creator, Pieter Hintjens. Hintjens created hundreds of volunteer project teams, and found almost all of them to be magnets for “bad actors.” This proved to be such a problem that he devoted most of his final years to analyzing and ultimately, writing about it. Hintjens writes: “There are some scary people around. People who take what they want, using their charm and wits. Con artists. Professional liars. They take from friends, colleagues, family, and strangers alike. They never apologize or feel remorse towards the people they hurt. They often have criminal careers. We call them by many names. Narcissist. Anti-social. Sociopath. CEO. And more and more, we call them Psychopath.” Can Creator share with us the divine perspective of these scary people around us?ClosedNicola asked 3 years ago • Limiting Beliefs248 views0 answers0 votesHintjens posits the idea that society has developed ‘psychopath detectors.’ One of the principal ones is humor. Hintjens writes that we instinctually trust people who make us laugh. “It’s not enough to just laugh, either. Both parties must laugh at the right moment, not too soon, not too late. The laugh must last long enough. It must not be too loud, nor too soft. A good joke makes both the teller and the listener happy. A failed joke disturbs and irritates us.” He further writes, “What we have evolved with humor is an empathy detector. If the listener has no empathy, they are baffled. A psychopath cannot laugh ‘right.’ He does not laugh, or he laughs too much, or too long. We are more wary of people who laugh too much, than of those who don’t laugh at all. What is he hiding, we wonder?” What is Creator’s perspective?ClosedNicola asked 3 years ago • Limiting Beliefs227 views0 answers0 votesHintjens writes about art: “Art serves no functional purpose except to stir emotions in the viewer.” He further writes, “Psychopaths have many curious traits. One is their lack of interest in creative acts. They do not draw, paint, sculpt, or carve. They do not take photographs, except of themselves and their possessions. They do not cook for pleasure, invent recipes, nor make their own bread as a hobby. They do not create music, though they can be excellent performers of others’ work. This lack of creative drive is a curious thing when you first see it. It matches their generally empty sense of humor. Their hobbies are travel, shopping, eating out, meeting new people. This is consumption, not creation.” Hintjens says, “I’m certain creativity is another secret language of empathy.” And as such, another effective psychopath detector. What is Creator’s perspective?ClosedNicola asked 3 years ago • Limiting Beliefs230 views0 answers0 votesHintjens suggests that we have an incomplete view of the psychopath. The general assumption is that they are broken people, but he suggests that they are in fact human predators. “Psychopaths hunt other humans. They attack and capture them. They feed on their time, resources, power, and energy. They dispose of the remains. And they move on. Every relationship between a social human and a psychopath follows the same pattern. There seem to be no exceptions, no nice psychopaths. To be a psychopath is to be a predator.” What is Creator’s perspective?ClosedNicola asked 3 years ago • Limiting Beliefs207 views0 answers0 votes